Hi you all! I've been using Mint for a few years now, but just now registered into this forum. Yeah, I tried Ubuntu 11.04 and I hated Unity. I test a lot of distros and always seem to come back to Mint. Mint is the best!Also I am happy that Mint still stays with Gnome 2, it's the good old desktop, and feels perfect to me. Eventually Gnome 2 will become obsolete, but I really don't see anything wrong with it, and I'm glad to stay with it for next half-year at least.Really eager to get the final Katya with Firefox 4 and the new LibreOffice, I didn't test the RC, because I suppose the final is just around the corner. If there's an RC2, I will test that.Keep on Minting, - Tommi

Thats also my viev of things hufter, but I have a problem with both 10 and 11RC - on 2 computers :Aspire 1800 : installation of 11RC freezes nearly at the end of it. 10 : the wireless do not not work (right driver installed)Aopen EP945-m8 chipssett : i945Gm-PILF, 11RC do not even start due to missing vital files (several180sec outbreaks). 10 : What for me seemes like lack of graphic driver - screen goes black after a while with blue square like disconnected cable. ( both new and upgrade from 9)

I really would like to follow up software developments.Anyboby knew some tricy things ?

Hey Guys!I've just downloaded what I presume to be the final (release) version of Linux Mint 11 64 bit from the French server and installed it to my box. First impressions were good, except for the scroll bars (but then that is my personal view). However, I then started setting it up and putting it to work. Where is Pulse Audio, its loaded but I can't find it in any menus? Without access to the to this GUI I can't set up my system.

I wont even try to talk about Compiz, what with disappearing Title bars and no simple reset.

My Brick wall is getting quite dented and I will have to reload Mint 10 (to get some work done) and try Mint 11 later in a virtual box.

Mind you, this is nothing new, I had to wait about a month before Mint 10 behaved itself after its release. Waiting is....

One thing tho, during the install I always partition manually and since i have a separate disk where i store my audio, video and so on I noticed that I could not manually enter a mount point for the second drive. I remember that that was possible when I installed Mint 10.I don't know if that is a bug or a feature. So let me know if I should file a bug report against it.

Other then that everything seems to work great. So thank you very much for all the time, effort you put in to make the most amazing GNU/Linux distribution I have come across since I started with linux (Redhat 4.2)

marc-koenders wrote:Replaced Mint 10 with 11 this morning and so far it looks great.

One thing tho, during the install I always partition manually and since i have a separate disk where i store my audio, video and so on I noticed that I could not manually enter a mount point for the second drive. I remember that that was possible when I installed Mint 10.I don't know if that is a bug or a feature. So let me know if I should file a bug report against it.

Other then that everything seems to work great. So thank you very much for all the time, effort you put in to make the most amazing GNU/Linux distribution I have come across since I started with linux (Redhat 4.2)

It's an upstream bug, Ubuntu may have done it deliberately in their never ending quest to dumb down Linux, I'm not sure. But it is an upstream bug that really does need to be resolved before release.

AlbertP wrote:If Ubuntu is going ahead like this, we should fork Ubiquity I think. I'm afraid that this won't be the last Ubuntu change that people may not like.

Here's the notes from the bug filed with Ubuntu

Release-noted:

* The manual mount point entry box in the desktop installer's partitioner does not accept keyboard input. The drop-down still works, so various standard mount points may be selected, but custom ones cannot. This was noticed too late to be corrected for 11.04. In the meantime, you can mount partitions manually later, or use the alternate install CD. (Bug:769043)

Since Mint does not have the option of an "alternative" install this really does need to be resolved before Mint 11's release.

Me too couldn't wait, and installed the supposed unannounced final. Works like a charm, final enough for me, whether it is the actual final. I'm only wondering, was Time and Date settings left out on purpose, so that it just uses ntp, or was it forgotten.

I also tried "the unannonced 11" on same computers.This installationprogram went longer, but crached just before the finish.Sorry to say !I really liked the 10, so : looking forward to try out the benefit of Your hard work -

Sorry, gotta take back "works like a charm" - It doesn't. When I tried to enable Desktop Cube in Compiz settings, hell broke loose. Window borders and titles disappeared, windows could not be moved, no workspaces anymore, just unusable. Not ready. Deleted a bunch of setup files to get to defaults again.

Really come on Mint developers! I know you are doing great work and all, but what the rainbows are final looking files lying about in Heanet for days without announcement. As it seems you should have put out a RC2 instead. Can we have a little transparency here?

Update: Just tried the same thing with Ubuntu 11.04, all updates installed. Installing compiz-config and trying to enable desktop cube there too. The same thing happened. Seems like Ubuntu now rushes on with the new stuff, forgetting about stability. Stability has always been the main points of Linux systems, if we lose that we lose Linux. Time to separate Mint from Ubuntu?

Last edited by hufter on Wed May 25, 2011 1:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.

hufter wrote:Sorry, gotta take back "works like a charm" - It doesn't. When I tried to enable Desktop Cube in Compiz settings, hell broke loose. Window borders and titles disappeared, windows could not be moved, no workspaces anymore, just unusable. Not ready. Deleted a bunch of setup files to get to defaults again.

Really come on Mint developers! I know you are doing great work and all, but what the **** are final looking files lying about in Heanet for days without announcement. As it seems you should have put out a RC2 instead. Can we have a little transparency here?

"Expect Compiz to feature multiple regressions. Whether it's with Gnome 3 which does its own compositing or Unity which configures Compiz exactly as it needs, upstream projects are slowly but surely turning their back on this project."